Fetty provides the lone guest feature on Stefani’s new album, on the song “Asking 4 It.” Seeing his name on there might seem strange, but this is not the first time the No Doubt frontwoman has shared the mic with a rapper. Here is the complete history of Stefani’s hip-hop collabs.

Eve brought Stefani along for this cut from her album Scorpion, which also featured the single “Who’s That Girl?”. Is this the best song on this list? Yes. Is it the best video? Debatable, but watch it back anyway for an appearance by Dr. Dre, who would later work with Gwen and Eve on another track…

Return Of Saturn was the first album No Doubt released after the wildly successful Tragic Kingdom, but Rock Steady felt like the real follow-up, with better songs—and sales—than its predecessor. The first single from the album was “Hey Baby,” which went on to win a Grammy and featured Killer Mike and OutKast on one of the official remixes.

André 3000 revived Johnny Vulture—a character from his “Hey Ya” video–for an appearance on Stefani’s song from her debut album as a solo artist, Love. Angel. Music. Baby. Johnny’s in full 1960s character here, encouraging Gwen to get herself “dolled up” before he picks her up for a date at the drive-in, but the frenetic pace of the rest of the song makes it feel like “Johnny Angel” on speed.

Slim Thug was foretelling the future with the title of his debut album, Already Platinum, from 2005: “Still Tippin'” reached that certification in 2006, and Gwen Stefani’s Love. Angel. Music. Baby., which featured their song together, went platinum just months after Thug’s album dropped. The pair gave a memorable performance on this one, though the “Between The Sheets” sample from the Isley Brothers may be the true star.

Eve and Gwen: Reunited and it feels so…incessant. Who knew a pop song that pulled from Fiddler On The Roof would go gold and get nominated for a Grammy? Leave it to Dr. Dre, the song’s producer, to make it work.

André 3000 starts off Love. Angel. Music. Baby. posing as Johnny Vulture, but by the end of the album, he takes off his disguise to reveal his true identity on “Long Way To Go.” It’s a fitting moment too, as this song turns to the more straight-faced topic of interracial dating, with audio clips from Martin Luther King Jr.

Before they were buds on The Voice, and after they’d worked together writing 2004’s “Hollaback Girl,” Pharrell and Gwen went at it on this song from Pharrell’s 2006 album, In My Mind. The track was Skateboard P’s first single from his solo debut studio album.

A year after Stefani guested on “Can I Have It Like That,” Pharrell returned the favor by appearing on “Yummy” from The Sweet Escape. Stefani had originally intended to make only one solo album before returning to No Doubt, but as she says on this song, “Encore, sophomore, only one solo, I swore / Big mouth, applause, oh please, one more / Wanna hear it before I say ‘Naw’ / Let me check my itinerary, um……alright.”

“Kings Never Die” was released as part of the soundtrack for the boxing movie Southpaw, and it marked Gwen Stefani and Eminem’s first collaboration. The album came out on Shady Records and featured tracks from 50 Cent, the Weeknd, Slaughterhouse, and more, but the guests were not enough to propel album sales beyond 69,000 copies total by its third week.

Snoop Dogg’s album Bush was one of the pleasant surprises of 2015. Not only was Snoop back to going by Snoop Dogg (R.I.P. Snoop Lion), but the whole thing felt like a return to form, albeit one with a much more chill-dad vibe. Stefani guested on the album’s ninth track, a song about escaping everyday life, and while her feature was good, Stevie Wonder's—appearing on Bush’s opening cut—was better.

Pharrell usually walks the line between rapper and producer, but sometimes he adds singer to his resume. That’s what he does on this song from the live-action Paddington Bear movie, Paddington, in between the acoustic guitar and brass. You could argue that he spits his line more than Stefani, so maybe it counts as a rap. A similar discussion arises when considering Stefani’s most recent rap-sung collaboration with one of Paterson, N.J.’s finest.

Ring the alarm, or rather the bell in this song’s case: Fetty’s here, baby. He drops a quick intro before Stefani steps in and warns a new guy (Blake Shelton?) to think long and hard before deciding to date her. Fetty reappears at the end with a few sing-song, “My Way”-style lines. “Come and stand with Zoovier Zoo, I can be your captain,” he says. Tempting, but he doesn’t seal the deal until he says, “Baby, let’s fill the swimming pool with money / Make it splash in, yeah baby,” which we imagine looks something like this: